The evening world. Newspaper, April 27, 1912, Page 9

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Saturday, April 27, ef eaten, a er "‘Sae) WELL .WELL,WELL,| r= ‘OR THE LAST hahaa f OH went Just f Tite T TELL YA LeT’em RUN TATE AWAY.AL LET : Younes ON® HOME ‘You Tare MY, ; To His MA? Picture [ HE'S 4OING 10 BE SH-SHt | pyeoibent sont. | wh great GEN Rat oh Hin FoR IND Y Gor | 17 MORE LIKE HIM } THEY MAKE MC Fn ks 3 AND THE DEAREST SICK 9 cj SWEETEST TLLEALL ON HY EN vw Fi 1 A id M4 ‘ 4 GOT MARRIED HESHAS SOME SENSE! z cor gate oo) ee eS an And Thornton, olwerving this fact, resumed his | a ed customer wail roll, leaving the stranded actor still stranded, ou have macaroni here too often, end oe 4 A Variegated Menu. \ the downtown district of Chicago there is a M1 do say it myself, Mr. Thornton, || restaurant which makes a specialty of serving yed the Mexican in fine ebape.” @ busines men's luncheon at an unusually 1% the case,” replied Thomton, hand-jow price, the meal consisting of moat, a cup of eco and a clgarette paper, “Zoll me kotfee and a sile dish of vegetables, ‘One ’ of work,” explained the other, face brightening at the prospect of ‘Thoriton's taking an interest in him. ‘I've done all sorts of roles i y 7, the part of a Mexican?” en. good at it, weren't yout” are right, sir; quite right,’ agreed the wer, : don’t want to pow aso kicker,” explained tomer, “but Bo more abuut it, I beg," entreated the Nagy ft changed Ae be called ie head waiter and said: the chet 14s Macaroni too often, T>- ie of the customers of the piace became in- | morrow ill make « cheoge, i ad made uch a hit ase Mex. |diguent Deceton macaroni hed Geen served as alepagncttii"—Tue Popular Mageaise, “° "Mt road, Baqually apparent was the fact that the man’ needed a job or money, same the Popular Magazine. “How do you do, my friend!" greeted Thornton, |1 The strandel actor, recoguizing Thornton, poke to him a trifle eadly, ‘1 “Need a job: iked ‘Duornton, 8 clga: do—| ly," auewered the actor, ‘The inan Them Was the Happy Days #% (xtti>) #4 By Dwis | , >» = os SA eR eee SS Far we Billy played rugby with zeal and zest, Beasiec just gasped; she sure loved “1 now want a dude, who couldn't be rude, a man of good manners, you ————_ RIL me, Jimmy = ay deat. He was so big, #0 manly and brave, out in soctety scarce could | Remember how \ see |F (7 Comes BACK have. i WE USED Te DRILL, Tome — . Just FoR Poor little Cupid found it quite stupid, and very embarrassing, too, “1 think,” declared Bess, “I must really confess, that the Dude ts the: ‘ MARK Time! when Billy so burly, with raven locks curly, made blunders each minute or —— WnT! * a | | to. man for me." ELEANOR SCHORER, MARR Time! (Frama! | = Hep: ner: Hep. | " r ; f Little Dont’s for Here Are the “Ten Well Groomed Laws of Heredity” ITH justia trifle more thought, ) force the body to stand, but with each or a Mettle more care so many|#tep the Jar to the base of the brain Jk HERE are ten Jaws of heredity) the other in other respects, " that govern tho life of every| 0. It may inherit the father's et. heel, man, woman and child. ‘This fact | tributes for one period of extwtenes, women could be thoroughly|{# much greater than {t ts with any well groomed and perfectly |other kind her! dressed. It 1 not a matter ot| The old excuse which many women|was determined at the recent meeting |“"e {oi0® Mentners for another, } more expensive clothes alone, or how|plead, that they have such a high !n-jof the medical acction of the American! of prepatency, oc the panier: tuaMey: much money @ woman has at her com-|s#tep that only the shoe with the French [rage Ingura ‘onvention, where the| aside or pode] mae teataney to push’ mand, for many @ woman who has|heel will eupport ft, és nonsense. The 4 ms t i her ‘ativtbetim “5 subject was assed at length tn all! 7, Attributes which are simélar tn apent hundreds and even thousands upon |Cuban heel and the strong and Heh} iy phases. both parents tend to beco! repetent, ” her clothes ts often unbscomingly|@rches that the present day shoomakers| yy you roxcmble tn your mental and| giving rise to convergent are : gowned, or ts even dowdy looking. put on thetr shoes will give eupport to] 5) eical attributes your father or your| ive heredity, gent or cumulag- Often the appearance of a street ult |@My instep, however high. And the new] icther or nome particular grandparent?| &, A ‘| oth ome partle mp. 2) & Attributes 7 wmnitted is epolled by @ too elaborate het, The| street shoes shown by the modish shops | Rohn sau bokeh: & aaa Ree milisnet ee fay be teenie oof fa, Proper hat t# absolutely necessary to|oumht to win any one by their stunning | certain traits that ono of your parents | other, to another ina third fourth, complete filly a coatuine, and a tailored |@ppearance, !f not by thelr healthful) qeveloned at that age become yours? petit mora remote generetioo—e anneal jand of the REMEMBER THE a » CAPTURED Vou , iis Tenswun— Locked You > THE SMOKE HOUSE { ' REAR MARCH: (Four in! HA Hat Har wat YES (| (ie WAS E ALL NIGH? 2? HA HE 4 hat, Pio- | advantages, 7 piestions, together with the WH f FA iman may en-| With gloves that are auttadie, atther ae Pee egicein iors | ah, onriag racarelaes , — Mt. toe, But harden vour hearts, ‘The/of heavy ten or white, a woman may|aueniy coe e ty imcurance| ® Attributes tend to appear tm @e Progeny about the same time of Mfe a |which they became manifest tm @e parents, 10, tea of the father ten@ @e Qe” ama! turban or the large hat with plain| feel that she ts fitly gowned for the| Convento Hines can de just as becoming and ta in| street and that sho has nothing tol A, iy th, {t was declted that no much better taste. worry- about, from the lines of her! neredity i an important elemont tr ‘The great tendency of the New York'tilored hat to whore hor walking DOote| iongevity, wiouxl only @ few diseane woman fe to overdress, to wear gowns |*how under the edge of her trim aktrt. lary inherited, waya the Chicago ‘Tri. | Merited by the sons, and of the metper_ upon the street that should never be serra oy oT dune, Tho tendency to disonse !s, how. | the daughters, “ acon outside the hou, uniees the) Output of Aluminum, fever, ofien nandet down from parents| Teredity plays an important gaseeet wearer ‘@ going n carriage OF auto: Atenongh the early expectations of ipen, ‘The following ten lawy of bass in tuberculosis and cancerem @f mobile, [the wholeania substitution of alumi- ¥ wore naknowledged to ba cor | fectous, but Ikew! Another habit which 1s a glaring fentt num for ateel and tron have not bean | re | mation, gout, and agninet ood taste 1s the wearing of reatieed, tho demand for the new| 1, The ghiid tenda to Inherit every | We do not inherit (uberoulesla, Sot we, Days merreky the French heeled shoo, and especially |alloy hae crown enormously, rom] attribute of parents, do inherit & Jeaened vitallty, or @ tame siippers, upon tho street, They were/a production in the U Htates of | % Contradictory attributes cannot | dency to contract tuberculosis infection, never intended to be used with a street| lesa than one hundred thousand pounds| be inherited from both parents, Underwotghta are usually people Whe drena and were certainiy never made|in 1888, 1n 199% the output had grown| 8 The child may herit the attri- {have inherited svoh 4 lessened vitality,” to be worn for a walk of any length. | to 360,000 pounds, in 1908 to 7,500,000 | butes of elt ly and they yun the further risk of i Not only are they injurious, harming | pounds and to-day it is in excess off 4. 1 may inher: 1a qualities of] tion from their underweight brothese ep, the spine by the angle at whieh they | 50,000,000 pounds, ‘ one parent in some respects and of sisters who ere apt to be infested, 4 ™ - . 7 8 * ‘ nob has bi peli 7.5 me

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